This document provides an overview of management and organizational behavior concepts. It discusses that organizations are made up of people and have goals and structures. Management involves coordinating work through and with people efficiently and effectively. Managers plan, organize, lead and control organizations. Internal factors like culture and external factors like competitors influence organizations. Decision making involves identifying problems, generating solutions, evaluating alternatives and implementing solutions. Planning determines goals and means to achieve goals through missions, objectives and strategies.
This document provides an overview of management and organizational behavior concepts. It discusses that organizations are made up of people and have goals and structures. Management involves coordinating work through and with people efficiently and effectively. Managers plan, organize, lead and control organizations. Internal factors like culture and external factors like competitors influence organizations. Decision making involves identifying problems, generating solutions, evaluating alternatives and implementing solutions. Planning determines goals and means to achieve goals through missions, objectives and strategies.
This document provides an overview of management and organizational behavior concepts. It discusses that organizations are made up of people and have goals and structures. Management involves coordinating work through and with people efficiently and effectively. Managers plan, organize, lead and control organizations. Internal factors like culture and external factors like competitors influence organizations. Decision making involves identifying problems, generating solutions, evaluating alternatives and implementing solutions. Planning determines goals and means to achieve goals through missions, objectives and strategies.
This document provides an overview of management and organizational behavior concepts. It discusses that organizations are made up of people and have goals and structures. Management involves coordinating work through and with people efficiently and effectively. Managers plan, organize, lead and control organizations. Internal factors like culture and external factors like competitors influence organizations. Decision making involves identifying problems, generating solutions, evaluating alternatives and implementing solutions. Planning determines goals and means to achieve goals through missions, objectives and strategies.
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MGMT 150
Unit 1: Introduction to Organization and Management
1) Organization - People: Make decisions to set up these goals and purpose and they strive to achive them. - Structure: Organization develop a systematic structure that defines and limits the behaviors of its members. - Goals: The purpose of an organization is expressed in terms of a goal or set of goals. 2) What is management? - Management is the process of coordinating work activities that completed efficiently and effectively with and through other people. Efficiency: Doing things right: Getting the most output for the least inputs Effectiveness: Doing the right things: Attaining organizational goals 3) Who are managers? * Excellent managers: Peter Drunker Jack Welch Bill Gates Philip Kotler - Emloyee is the person work directly on a job or task and had no subordinates. - Manager is the person can coordinate and oversees the work of other people and organization to the goals. * 3 levels of manager Top: President (CEO, GM, Chair) Middle: (Head of HR, Marketing, …) Faculty: Dean and Vice Dean Centre Department: Head First-line: Head of division and Team leader (Supervisor) 4) What do the managers do? 4.1 Management functions Planning Organizing Leading Controlling - Planning: defining goals, establishing strategy, and developing plans to coordinate activities. - Organizing: Determining what needs to be done, how it will be done, and who is to do it. - Leading: Motivating leading and any other actions involved in dealing with people. - Controlling: Monitoring activities to ensure that they are accomplished as planned. 4.2 Management skills - Technical: Deal with things Proficient to a specific type of work Ability to work with things Based on specific knowledge Necessary at lower/middle management Less used by upper/senior management - Human: Deal with people Ability to work with people Openess to inputs to others Adapt ideas based on input Create atmosphere of trust Important at all the three levels - Conceptual: Deal with ideas Ability to work with ideas and concepts Strategic plans and setting direction Cognitive, business and strategic skills Most important for top managers Necessary skill to climb the career ladders 4.3 Management roles Interpersonal roles: Figurehead, leader, liasion Information roles: Monitor, disseminator, spokesperson Decisional roles: Entreperneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, negotiator Unit 2: Organization behaviors, culture and environment * Internal environment: A. Resource: Overall 1. Marketing 2. Finance 3. R&D 4. Operations 5. Human resource 6. Information Systems B. Organizational Culture C. Organizational Structure Identify the Strengths and Weakness of organization 1) Organizational Behaviour - Behaviour refers to what people do in organization, that their attitudes are, how they perform. - Organizational Behaviour is concerned with the study of the behaviour if the poepl within an organizational setting. It involves the understanding, prediction and the control of human behaviour. - Organizational behaviour focuses on three levels of behaviour in organization: 1. Individuals – learning, attitude development and perception, motivation. 2. Group – group structure and processes, interperonal communication and conflict. 3. The larger organizational environment – leadership, power, organizational structure, work design and change processes. * Why study organizational behaviour? - The main reason is that most of us work in orgnaizations so we need to understand, predict and influence (UIP) the behaviour of others in organizational settings. - Marketing students learn marketing concepts and computer science students learn about circuitry and software code. But everyone needs organizational behaviour knowledge to address the people issues that we face when trying to apply marketing, computer and other ideas. 2) Organizational Culture - Organizational culture refers to a system of shared meaning held by members that distinguishes the organization from other organizations. - Seven primary characteristics: Innovation: Experimenting, opportunity seeking, risk taking, few rules, low cautiousness Stability: Predictability, security, rule-oriented Respect for people: Fairness, tolerance Outcome orientation: Action oriented, high expectations, results oriented Attention to detail: Precise, analytic Team orinetation: Collaboration, people-oriented Aggressiveness: Competitive, low emphasis on social responsibility * How a culture begins - Ultimate source of an organization’s culture is its founders. - Founders have vision of what the organization should be. - Unconstrained by previous ideologies or customs. - New organizations are typically small; facilitates the founders’ imparting of their vision on all organizational members. * Culture creation occurs in three ways: Founders hire employees who feel the way they do. Employees are indoctrinated and socialized into the founders’ way of thinking. Founders’ behaviors act as role models. - Sustain through selection: The explicit goal of the selection process is to identify and hire individuals with the knowledge, skills, and abilities to perform successfully. - Top management: The actions of top management also have a major impact on the organization’s culture. - Culture is transmitted to employees through: Stories Rituals Material symbols Language 3) National culture - National culture: is a system of values and norms that are shared among a group of people and that what taken together constitute a design for living there. + Values are abstract ideas about what a group believes to be good, right and desirable + Norms are the socail rules and guidelines that prescribe appropriate bahavior in particular situations + Society refers to a group of people who share a common set of values and norms. - Values: + Basic convictions that people have Right and wrong Good and bad Important and unimportant + Learned from the culture in which the individuals is reared + Influence one’s behavior - Differences in cultural values may result in varying management practices 4) The External Environment a. Specific environment * Substitutes: - Types of substitutes: Product for product substitution Sibtitution of needs * Suppliers - Suppliers provide the raw materials the organization uses to produce its output. * Customers * Competitors - Other organizations in the same industry or type of business that provide goods or services to the same set of customers. * New entrants - Firms are not in the industry but could easily overcome entry barriers. - Barriers ro entry are facroes that need to be overcome by new entrants if they are to compete succesfully. * SWOT Ananlysis - SWOT is an analysis of the Strengths and Weaknesses present internally in the organization, coupled with the Opportunities and Threats that the organization faces externally. - A SWOT analysis should enable you to make strategic decisions by considering: ♦ internal strengths and weaknesses ♦ external opportunities and threats. b. General environment - Components of the General (Macro) Environment (PEST analysis) Political/Legal trends Economic trends Socio-cultural trends Technological trends - The purpose of External Analysis (PEST): to understand what may affect the future of the enterprise as a whole from outside itself. UNIT 3: MANAGERIAL DECISION MAKING & PLANNING * Problem solving vs Decision making - Problem solving is a set of activities designed to analyze a situatuon systematically and generate, implement, and evaluate solutions. - Decision making is a mechanism for making choices at each step of the problem- solving process. - Decision macking is part of problem solving, and decision making occurs at every step of the problem-solving process. * 4 steps of solving a problem Step 1: Identify the problem 1. Identifying a problem - A problem becomes a problem when a manager becomes aware of it. - There pressure to solve the problem - The manager must have the authority, information, or resources needed to solve the problem. 2. Identifying decision criteria - Costs that will be incurred (invesments required) - Risks likely to be encourtered (chance of failure) - Outcomes that are derised (growth of the firm) 3. Allocating weights to the criteria - Assigning a weight to each item places the items in the correct priority order of their importance in the decision-making process. Step 2: Generate alternative solutions 4. Developing alternatives Step 3: Evaluate and choose an alternative 5. Ananlyzing alternatives 6. Selecting an alternative Step 4: Implement and monitor the chosen solution 7. Implementing the alternative 8. Evaluating decision effectiveness * Planning Outline 1) Goals and plans in organization - Planning means determining the organization’s goals and defining the means for achieving them. a. Definition of goals and plans - A goal is a desired future statement that the organization attempts to realize. - A plan is a blueprint for goal achievement: it specifies the necessary resource allocations, schedules, tasks and other actions. * Organizational misson - The mission decribes the organization’s value, aspirations and reason for being- the organization’s reason for existence. - A well-defined mission: + The basis for development of all subsequent goals and plans + A clear mission + Short and straightforward + Describing basic business activities and purposes as well as the values that guide the organization b. Types of goals and plans * Types of Goals - Strategic goals: Broad statements decribing where the organization wants to be in the future. - Tactical goals: The results that major divisions and departments within the organization intend to achieve. - Operational goals: The specific results expected from departments, work groups and individuals. * Types of Plans Breadth of use Time frame Specificity Frequency of use Long term Stragetic Direcional Single use (Beyond 5 years) Short term Tactical Specific Standing (Less than 1 year) Operational Short term Specific Standing * SMART Specific: Your goal is direct, detail, and meaningful. Measurable: Your goal is quantifiable to track progress or success Attainable: Your goal is realistic and you have the tools and/or resources to attain it Relevant: Your goal aligns with your company mission Time-based: Your goal has a deadline 2) Planning types and models a. Traditional approaches to planning - Central Planning: has been done entirely by top executives, consulting firms or most commonly, by central planning departments. b. Modern approaches to planning - Decentralized Planning: assigned to major departments and divisions to help managers develop their own stragetic plan. - Management by objectives (MBO): is a method whereby managers and employees define goals foe every department, project and person, and use them to monitor subsequent performance. Step 1: Set goals - Corporate strategic goals - Department goals - Individual goals Step 2: Develop action plan Step 3: Implementation Step 4: Review progress - Review progress - Take corrective action Feedback Step 5: Appraise overall performance UNIT 4: ORGANIZING I, Organizational structure - The formal arrangement of jobs within an organization * Six key questions for Organizational Structure To what degree are tasks subdivided into separate jobs? – Work specialization On what basis will jobs be grouped together? – Departmentalization To whom do individuals & groups report? – Chain of command How many individuals can a manager efficiently and effectively handle? – Span of control Where does decision-making authority lie? – Centralization and decentralization To what degree will there be rules and regulations to direct employees and managers? – Formalization 1. Work specialization - Sometimes called division of labor, is the degree to which organizational tasks are subdivided into separate jobs. - The rationale for specialization Necessary in every organization because the “job” of most organizations is too large for one A worker learning one specific, highly specialized task, can learn it quickly and perform it efficiently A worker repeating the same job does not lose time changing operations The more specialized the job: + The easier it is to design specialized equipment + The easier the job training 2. Departmentalization 2.1. Functional approach 2.2. Divisional approach - Geographical departmentalization - Product departmentalization - Process departmentalization - Customer departmentalization 2.3. Cross-functional approach - Consist of employees from various functional departments who are responsible for meetings as a team and resolving mutual problems. 3. Chain of command - The chain of command is the continuous line of authority that extends from the upper levels to the lowest levels and clarfires who report to whom. - Staff authority - Line authority (quyền hạn trực tiếp) Level of authority that entitles manager to direct the work of an employee Contributes directly to the achievement of organizational objectives 4. Span of control - The number of subordiantes a manager can efficienly and effectively direct. - Width of span is affected by: Skills and abilities of the manager Employee characteristics Physical proximity of subordinates Standardization of tasks Supporting by technology Leadership style 5. Centralization and decentralization - Centralized decision making: + Decision-making is concentrated at a single point in the organizations + Top managers make all the decisions and lower-level employees simply carry out those orders - Decentralized decision making: + Decision-making is pushed down to the managers who are closest to the action + Increasing the decision-making authority (power) of employees- Employee Empowerment 6. Formalization - High formalization means employees have little discretion - Low formalization means employees have more freedom. II, Organizational design 1. Mechanistic and organic organization UNIT 5: LEADING Leading consists of motivating employees and influencing their behavior to achieve organizational objectives. I, Understanding and managing individual differences at work * Demographic Diversity - Difference in background factors shape worker attitudes and behaviors + Key sources of diversity include gender, age, race, ethic, physical disability + Advantage of understanding diversity: Capitalizing on differences Avoiding negative stereotyping * Sex and Gender differences - Sex differences are actual biological differences in males and females. - Gender differences are based on perceptions of male and female roles. * Personality differences - Is the persistent and enduring behavior patterns of an individual as expressed in wide variety of situations. - Is regarded as the core of who a person is. - A relatively stable set of characteristics that influences an individual’s behavior. - Personality factors are improtant to performance on the job and performance as a team member - Behavior is determined (moderated) by the interactive effects of the person and the environment. * Consequences of individual differences - Variations in productivity: The more complex the job, the larger the impact of individual productivity differences on work output. - Ability and talent: Having the right skills and abilities directly affects job performance. - Prioensity for achieving high-quality results: Some workers take pride and pursue excellence in their work while others do not. - Empowerment and involvement: Workers differ in their desires to be self-fulfilled by and involved in their work. - Preferred leadership style: Some workers prefer or require more supervision than others. - Need for contact with other people: Workers differ in their need to relate to others on the job. * Abilities and skills - Ability or attitude is a stable natural talent for doing something mental or physical. - A skill is an acquired talent that a person develops related to a specific task. * Values - Basic convictions that people have Right and wrong Good and bad Important and unimportant - Learned from the culture in which the individual is reared - Influence one’s behavior - Differences in cultural values may result in varying management practices II, Personnality and individual behavior * Emotions & Moods - Emotions: Intense feelings that are directed at someone or something - Moods: Feelings that tend to be less intense than emotions and that lack a contextual stimulus * Identify the Sources of emotions and moods - Personality: There is a trait component – affect intensity - Day and time of the week - Weather: illusory correlation – no effect - Stress: Even low levels of constant stress can worsen moods - Social activities: Physical, informal and dining activities increase positive moods - Sleep: Poor sleep quality increase negative affect - Exercise: Does somewhat improve mood, especially for depressed people - Age: Older folks experience fewer negative emotions - Sex: Women tend to be more emotionally expressive, feel emotions more intensely, have longer-lasting moods, and express emotions more frequently than do men * Personality and Organizations - Emotional Intelligence (EQ): The extent to which people are self-aware, can manage their emotions, can motivate themselves, express empathy for others and possess social skills - Dimensions of EQ: Self-awareness Managing emotions Motivating oneself Empathy Social skills III, Motivating employees 1) What is motivation ? - Motivation refers to the processes that account for an individual’s willingness to exert high levels of effort to reach organizational goals, conditioned by the effort’s ability to satisfy some individual need. * Science of motivation - Extrinsic Motivation + Rewards + Punishment - Intrinsic Motivation + Autonomy – The desire to direct our own lives + Mastery – The urge to make progress and get better at something that matters + Purpose – The yearning to do what we do in service of something larger than ourselves 2) Early theories of motivation a. Maslow’s hierarchy of needs theory Physiological: Food, drink, shelter, … Safety: Physical, emotional, … Social: Affection, belongingness, … Esteem: Self-respect, autonomy (internal); status, attention (external), … Self-actualisation: Growth, achievement, … - Needs were categorized as five levels of lower-to higher-order needs. + Individuals must satisfy lower-order needs before they can satisfy higher order needs. + Satisfied needs will no longer motivate.0 + Motivating a person depends on knowing at what level that person is on the hierarchy. - Hierarchy of needs + Lower-order (external): Physiological, safety + Higher-order (internal): social, esteem, self-actualization b. Two factor theory Motivators Hygiene Factors These factors address issues that can lead to dissatisfaction. While getting These can lead to greater employee them right doesn’t necessarily mean a satisfaction. When present in the worker will love their job, getting them workplace, they often result in better wrong does mean that employees will employee performance probably be frustrated and, as a result, less engaged
• Rectify petty and bureaucratic
company policies. • Ensure each team member feels • Job Enrichment supported without feeling giving them more challenging or micromanaged. complex tasks to perform. It should • Ensure the day to day working culture make the job more interesting. is supportive. No bullying. No cliques. • Job Enlargement Everyone treated with equal respect. giving a team member a greater variety • Ensure that salaries are competitive of tasks to perform. This variety can within the industry. Ensure there are no also make a job more interesting. major salary disparities between • Employee Empowerment employees doing similar jobs. deligating increasing responsibility to • To increase job satisfaction and each team member. status, aim to construct jobs in such a way that each team member finds their job meaningful.
c. ERG theory – Clayton Alderfer
* Three categories of needs - Existence needs: These are the needs for physical wellbeing - Relatedness needs: These relate to the need for satisfactory relationships with others. - Growth needs: These focus on the development of human potential and the desire for personal growth and increased competence. d. Acquired needs theory – David Mcclelland - Implications studied by McClelland for management: + People with a high need for achievement to tend to be entrepreneurs. They like to do something better than competitors and take sensible business risks. + People who have a high need for affiliation are successful ‘integrators’, whose job is to coordinate the work of several departments in an organization + A high need for power often is associated with successful attainment of top levels in the organizational hierarchy. * Summary - Maslow: Enjoys wide recognition among practising managers. Most managers are familiar with it. - Herzberg: The popularity of giving workers greater responsibility for planning and controlling their work can be attributed to his findings. Shows that more than one need may operate at the same time. - Alderfer: Seen as a more valid version of the need hierarchy. Tells us that achievers will be motivated by jobs that offer personal responsibility, feedback, and moderate risks. - McClelland: Tells us that high need achievers do not necessarily make good managers, since high achievers are more interested in how they do personally. UNIT 6: CONTROLLING I, What is control? - Control is the process of monitoring activities to ensure that they are being accomplished as planned and of correcting any significant deviations. - Purpose of controlling: ensures that activities are completed in ways that lead to the attainment of the organizational goals. II, The control process 1. Meansuring 2. Comparing - The comparing step determines the degree of variation between actual performance and the standard - Acceptable range of variation: Khoảng dao động chấp nhận được (+-3%) 3. Taking managerial action * To correct deviations or inadequate standards - Immediate corrective action: Correcting a problem at once to get performance back on track - Basic corrective action: Determining how and why performance has deviated and then correcting the source of deviation - Revising the standard: Adjusting the performance standard to reflect current and predicted future performance capabilities III, Tools for controlling organizational performance - Feed-forward control: Control that prevents anticipated problems - Concurrent control: Control that takes place while an activity is in progress - Feedback control: Control that takes place after an action Provides evidence of planning effectiveness Provides motivational information to employees